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هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
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LearningTranscript
00:07Hey Captain Foda, what's wrong? I'm not feeling well, oh no! And to play, you need to be feeling well, of course.
00:15What do you want? We could have everyone leave here and leave the cameras. Do you want to escort the attendees from the World Championship? Okay, whatever you say.
00:23naturally
00:24Come on, guys, please, leave the room. There's still something I'm not comfortable with. Tell me, my dear brother, don't be shy, that's the most important thing.
00:31Stay comfortable, maybe you could set the AC to 32, it's not too much, just so I can be comfortable, but it's okay, it's okay
00:39It's okay, auto AC please, thank you. Here you go, I'm fine, everything's fine, but I have a small request: there's a teddy bear I consider lucky.
00:47On the secret, there's no more, guys. Maybe someone other than Hassan, because he looks like he's been through a lot. Don't eat them, or what?
00:54This belly is squeaking, this belly is hanging, this belly needs someone to love me. I need someone to love me. I have to get married before we start.
01:02I feel like I rushed things. I'm going to fire a shot. Maybe we should pay attention before the match gets cut too short. God have mercy. Maybe we should watch before the match gets cut too short.
01:11My uncle, may God have mercy on him, said, "Oh my beloved, I am one of two created beings."
01:15Someone took advantage of the incense seller and made a bomb, and I said we need air freshener.
01:21Opening up what they call a chessboard means chess itself. I don't know how to play except with the Arabic version and two sticks, in case I get better.
01:27I don't know how to play anything other than the "Makhatm" game. I wish we could play it twice, maybe we could turn off the lights and play like our grandparents did with their mobile phones.
01:36maybe
01:38Okay, I'm done. Everything is ready, Yafoudi, or is there anything else?
01:43Okay, okay, sir, I'm already all ready.
01:47Oh God, protect us. Thank God.
01:51Your role
01:55Now my turn
01:58any
01:59They won't need perfume.
02:01No, you're just wasting time now.
02:11Dear viewers, peace, mercy and blessings of God be upon you. Welcome to a new episode of the Al-Daheeh program.
02:15Hey dear viewer, if you're losing at chess, I want to tell you not to worry about the episode.
02:18Seriously, Abu Hamad, why am I such a donkey at chess?
02:20Hey dear viewer, this episode isn't just for chess lovers, but for all viewers.
02:25Five o'clock sharp on Tuesday
02:27July 11, 1972
02:28The original sports arena was in Erikia Viki, Iceland.
02:32And I think this country has its seats completely reserved for the public.
02:35It was the night of the millions of people sitting in front of screens in many parts of the world.
02:40All the countries of Habo Hamad are doing well and are following the crucial match.
02:43World Chess Championship Final
02:45Between the Soviet Union champion and the American champion
02:47The match that will go down in chess history as the match of the century
02:50On the podium we see the Soviet Union champion Boris Spassky playing with the white color on the chessboard
02:55The king's pawn advanced two squares forward
02:57To begin his journey to defend his title
02:59His right is from 1969
03:01The title that brought down the king of his country
03:03The Soviet Union since the time of World War II
03:05Spassky, after moving the eggs, pressed the stopwatch.
03:07And it began to move at the opponent's clock
03:09And it began to move at the opponent's clock
03:20Time is passing and no one knows where America's hero is.
03:23He was telling you, my dear, that this isn't the first time I've done this.
03:25He missed many matches in his home country for extremely trivial reasons.
03:28For example, the shape of the patch is not pleasing.
03:30Or the shape of the pieces is not suitable
03:31The match was postponed for two days.
03:33Because he refused to leave New York and go to Iceland
03:35And the heel of participation in the final is not signed
03:37The good either is the challenge of the game, or it agrees to its demands.
03:50Bobby Fischer, who was ranked number one in America in chess for 8 years
03:55The mysterious, impotent, controversial, but brilliant man
03:58Which will later be described as the game's main feature
04:01Your uncle Fisher comes down, rolls up his sleeves, and stirs up Hassan the Asian king.
04:04This crowd cheers, rejoices, and is terrified
04:07In the owner's name, my dear, if you don't know about historical tourism.
04:09We are in a cold war
04:10You are representing America in this war.
04:12If you lose this match, Bobby, you won't leave your house for a week.
04:16Her fans are saying that the final match of the century will be played, and every camp has started preparing their taunts to flood social media.
04:22And dear viewers, let's stop here. I'm going to move on to another story and leave the match for now.
04:26To keep you eager to know what happened in the match, listen to what I want to tell you now.
04:29The World Chess Championship has existed since 1886
04:33But this is the first time that the tournament final has been the headline story in newspapers and news outlets.
04:38It's not just in America; in many countries around the world, everyone is talking about the chess match.
04:43Guys, this football match is getting a lot of views!
04:45Aziz's idea is that this is the first time the final will be between two players, not Rose.
04:49She says here that the American element made chess, which was never a popular game,
04:53So suddenly they didn't pay attention to the colon
04:54A point like a Charleston pants and a hula hoop
04:56The American media turned the confrontation from a friendly match between two rival players
05:00To confront two blocs of superpowers at the height of the Cold War
05:04If the two powerful nations are unable to wage a nuclear war, they will suffer from weakness and helplessness, unable to fight each other in Canada.
05:09Instead of that happening, my dear, they're showing off their strength in the chess match.
05:13This is a venting of frustration; if he succeeds, he'll be able to defeat Spassky and diminish Soviet propaganda.
05:18Those who say that their dominance in this game reflects the sophistication and superiority of their communist political system over the capitalist West
05:25Look how communism produces people who are so weak they win at chess!
05:29Right, right
05:30This is the system that produced people with high intelligence who became chess champions.
05:34Harbah is my dear, the arena is a board of 64 squares
05:37It has the colors of a crow's hand and the sound of blood, just a crackling of two pieces.
05:41A squad of 16 chess pieces playing a squad of 16 chess pieces
05:45Behind every battalion is a general who takes the orders for the victory.
05:50We are all equal.
05:51We both have the same number; we both have skins with the same abilities.
05:55But here, only one wins over the other.
05:58Harba'a and Sada'a
05:59In the American media, it wasn't said that Bobby Fischer was the one who defeated Spassky.
06:02But it is said that Bobby Fischer defeated the Russians
06:04The Soviets saw this match as an existential battle.
06:07Up until now, there are people who believe that Robert Fisher
06:09He is the greatest chess player of all time
06:11The game he knows and he's 6 years old
06:13He lives in a modest apartment in Brooklyn with his mother.
06:15The mother who works two jobs to support him is his older sister, Juang.
06:20The sister who will get her brother a chessboard from a sweets shop under their house
06:23Messi the Jojo
06:23Nobody expected that time would be so consumed by this game.
06:37In his pursuit, he will cancel everything in his life.
06:39Sports study
06:40He even learned about the metal at his age
06:42Or it could be charity or social life of any kind
06:44So, he was distracted from everything except chess.
06:47To the point that his mother became worried and took him to a doctor himself, and he was not satisfied.
06:49But the doctor reassured her that there was nothing to worry about regarding the air we left her in chess.
06:53At the age of 9, Robert Fisher made the decision that he would become a world champion in the game.
06:56No, Abu Hamid, my work is now in the match.
06:58Work, labor, and labor
07:00I want to wait
07:01Finish this part and come back to the match, God willing.
07:03And don't let my neighbor sit in front of you.
07:04Why should I tell you? Robert is very talented in this game.
07:07To the point that when he reached the age of 13
07:08He will achieve victory against a very exceptional opponent.
07:11International Chess Master Donald Byrne
07:14In an amazing match, a tiki-tiki feat for someone his age
07:18Why should I tell you? That Robert the Queen is the most powerful piece in chess.
07:21The loss or sacrifice of which could cost you the whole role
07:25After the history of chess, they consider this move the move of the century.
07:28Ail's horse, about 16 years old, worked on the Century Movement
07:31Aayel, who has a mustache, made the game of the century.
07:33The term will remain associated with him to this day in the role of play, even if someone studied it today.
07:37At the age of fifteen, he became the youngest international master in the history of the game.
07:41Here, my dear, the United States of America made an important realization
07:43It seems we have a genius at chess.
07:46And the group, the champions of the Soviet Union, were embarrassed and brought us the title.
07:49This is an excellent opportunity; we've measured our competence and the capitalist system, which produces geniuses.
07:54Our market share is back to normal, even better than before.
07:57Robert Atvas then won the United States Chess Championship eight times.
08:00By a huge margin over all competitors
08:02And to understand the magnitude of the failure achieved at this time
08:04Chess wasn't a game that Americans were interested in.
08:06They had a game, a big and strong one.
08:08But there are no genius heroes among them.
08:10This is despite the fact that America contributed in the 19th century
08:12One of the game's legends, Paul Murphy
08:14However, no super American game has appeared since.
08:17And not a single American has won the world championship in anything other than chess.
08:19Bobby Fischer was also fighting heroically
08:21There are no top-level coaches, assistants, or analysts.
08:24He was able to become an international master at a young age
08:26He is selling his scarves
08:28Who will know this drama?
08:29There was also no funding for the players.
08:30In 1971
08:31Bobby Fischer qualifies to compete at a higher level
08:34The World Championship is not chess
08:35But his legendary success in the game
08:37He hoped that with every rise in his chess skills, he would prove his worth.
08:40He was experiencing a sharp decline in his social skills.
08:42Of course, this is due to all the suspicion and intense anxiety in the unit.
08:45Those who were always important to her
08:46He would push away anyone who tried to get close to him.
08:48And their first concern
08:49Regina
08:49No, my dear, no, the lady is distracting him from chess.
08:52Okay, my friend, I'm going to hell.
08:53And you won't show me the way
08:54Excellent, that's exactly what I want.
08:55His fame as a teenager as a player means he can receive many offers
08:58He can defeat forty players at the same time.
09:00Something like Frit Shaw in a movie about roads
09:02But of course, this had a lasting psychological impact.
09:04They were subjected to intense pressure from the press.
09:06Or from those who surrounded him
09:07Or from its surroundings
09:08Because they saw it as an opportunity to get it for money
09:11A paragraph about the Prophet's birthday
09:11As for the American treatment
09:13For him, it was simply an amusing segment for a child prodigy.
09:16They're running away from the audience a little
09:17Teachers answer
09:18A child who remains a miracle and puts himself in the realm of relativity
09:20And Jamil from Noufia
09:21He has his own dialogues, I mean
09:22Then we'll host him and ask him.
09:24And then we find strange things with him.
09:25For example, it's not shown on television.
09:27wow
09:28Because how does he expose his brain to radiation?
09:30Oh my God, how eccentric you are!
09:32His interests lie in reading and books outside the field of chess.
09:34Limited to topics that discuss his leering glances
09:37He was paranoid, my friend.
09:38At the age of 29
09:39His life was similar to that of a monk
09:40He's always alone, moving from one hotel to another.
09:43Yebizker Chess
09:44He wants to play a game inside his brain
09:46They were obsessed with the cheap and the one
09:47It wasn't just because of the preparation
09:48He should do it so that it becomes a great chess game.
09:51But Hosua was a result of his mother abandoning him when he was young.
09:53And before him, his father, who he didn't see.
09:55He was thinking, what if this one was imposed on me?
09:57I will accompany her through chess.
09:59Chess game
10:00Which will be a substitute for myself and for the world
10:02Chess genius
10:03But the madch has more of an effect on Fischer than chess.
10:05It is the effect of Fisher himself.
10:06On the opponents of Nakhail Tal
10:07He is one of the greatest Russian players
10:09And one of the greatest games in the world
10:10They described him as Achilles without a heel
10:12It means he has Achilles' power.
10:13But he doesn't have a weakness note.
10:15It's like a chess computer
10:16The situation is resolved unexpectedly.
10:18Amazingly fast
10:19Soviet analyst
10:20Those who analyzed the player were wrong
10:20They concluded that it needed a maximum of 25 seconds.
10:24So that he can act
10:25When they get a surprise, the game's atmosphere
10:26And it leads to the health step
10:27This is at the time
10:28The greatest game in the world
10:29He needs this during this period.
10:30At a lot of time
10:31Maybe the step he took
10:32Tabanka, that's a weak move.
10:33It's like sacrificing the most active horse on the board.
10:35In front of the elephant of the weak opponent
10:37But every time, Sizi
10:39He takes a step and finds health
10:41All of this was being done by Bush the Giant
10:42And in an unusual format
10:44He shakes his opponent's head
10:45And this man understood very well what he was doing.
10:47Any step
10:47No matter how weak their attention is
10:49They will always think that there is a deep plan behind this.
10:51Maydarsh, one of the ordinary people who started it, they will reveal it
10:53And many times they are right, my sister-in-law
10:55It will be called the spirit, and there is no failure.
10:57Grandmasters
10:58They feel threatened by this man
11:01From this kid, there were residences and markers in the game
11:04Convinced that Benayem's opponents failed
11:05And his brother sometimes plays with him
11:07It remains under the control of another power.
11:08It makes them feel the change in its sections
11:10And they sense his surrender
11:11The World Championships at that time was a three-year cycle.
11:14The game breathes life into a series of regional competitions.
11:17As a qualifying round for the World Championship
11:19They are being eliminated for the sake of the game.
11:21The winner of the game
11:22He has the right to play against the world champion.
11:25What's past
11:25The one who holds the title will meet and we'll see who won it.
11:27In 1970, when the competition began
11:29Robert Fisher was ranked number one in America
11:32In the qualifying series that determines the game
11:34The world champion's series failed to achieve its goal.
11:36Historic victories before facing
11:37Three of the game's greatest players of his time
11:39In the first match, he met someone named Mark Taynov
11:41Soviet International Professor
11:43Oh, my lady, international professor
11:44Let me tell you, this guy is more than just a player.
11:47Taiwainov de Nov greets in his name
11:49When Taiynov or from the last round they asked him
11:51Their comment says, "Didn't you know their mothers?"
11:53Okay, I can go play a game, we've stopped that job.
11:55The chessboard and they wiped the branch
11:57Then Larsen's daughter played, Abu Ahmed, then Larsen himself played.
11:59He is bullying his daughter
12:00Oh my dear, you reckless one, Larsen's daughter is one of the greatest
12:03The world of chess has a branch named after him, Abu Ahmed.
12:06Yes, indeed, my dear, there is an opening in the chessboard named after him.
12:19In the history of world long-distance football, this series of victories was unprecedented.
12:22Here, Fushar had the right to face the world champion and title holder, Boris Spassky.
12:28Spassky was a genius.
12:29Stamped with the Soviet-made chess machine
12:32School in the game, don't lose
12:33Unlike Fushar, he had his own team.
12:35He had top-level coaches and an assistant team.
12:38To understand the importance of this game to the Soviets
12:40Khalil, I'm telling you that chess was managed by the state, personally.
12:44Specifically through the Supreme Committee
12:45Affiliated with the Central Committee of the Communist Party
12:49Did you see how many buses we rode?
12:50The chess was on the ballet
12:51The circus was one of the most important pillars of Soviet propaganda.
12:55Those who are trying to prove their superiority over the West through it
12:58Do you know anyone who does this kind of mischief?
12:59Chess Circus Ballet
13:00Zakat of Tintilyun
13:01Let me, my dear, get to the point you've been waiting for since the beginning of the episode.
13:05It is the match
13:06But I'll start talking about the match.
13:07May I tell you?
13:07When the match time came
13:08And although this was a match Fischer had dreamed of his whole life
13:11However, he began to exaggerate his demands.
13:13Which included increasing the prize money.
13:15I should have told you that until the very last moment
13:16Nobody knew he was playing the match
13:18No
13:18Until a British intelligence agency interested in the game intervened
13:21Did the value of the prize go to waste?
13:23This is a record that has never been achieved before in the history of chess.
13:25$250,000
13:28And the issue was simply a matter of money, Mr. Fisher.
13:30Ah, he circles
13:31Uncle Saqr is coming down now
13:31Our relief is from the scorching heat
13:33We spoiled Uncle Saqr
13:33He plays
13:34I'm being stubborn if you're a coward, scared, and afraid of being petrified.
13:36The problem is often that there's no money.
13:38The problem was often psychological stress.
13:39This is according to a large number of locals.
13:41Those who said that Fisher asked for this money
13:42It turns out he's afraid of losing
13:44But not because he felt weaker than Spassky
13:46The hyena, so that he may be strong from a young age.
13:47He's used to the idea that there's no such thing as loss.
13:49Always successive influence
13:50Failure has always been a place of destruction.
13:51Defeat can have a devastating effect on his self-esteem.
13:53And his vision of a life that has no meaning
13:55Without chess
13:56Because it contains chess
13:56I checked, it's not there
13:57When he weakened on the BBC, they asked him
13:59If the problem is that he doesn't know anything about normal life or about people
14:02Does the monastic life he lives affect him?
14:04He failed to answer that he had thought very strongly about quitting chess.
14:06But the best of chess, I don't know what he'll do.
14:08What made him go to that match was a call from Henry Kissinger
14:11The US National Security Advisor at the time
14:14Kissinger, is he not Sadat's man?
14:16The one belonging to Sadat?
14:17My reinforcement is clear; your sense of nationalism is a bit high.
14:19But he meant that he was talking to Sadat
14:21What made him feel that the dignity of the American nation was a science of wisdom
14:24It is important and necessary; he defeats the Soviet Union in the game.
14:28Of course, from another perspective
14:29Spassky was facing the same pressure
14:31And what's this from? The Soviet Union.
14:33But Mr. Spaski, this isn't just a chess match.
14:36Everyone who sees me says this sentence
14:38I knew it was a defense of the Soviet chess castle
14:41Against capitalist imperialist America
14:44Okay, I'll go play.
14:45The tournament between them, my dear, was 24 matches.
14:48The defending champion must get 12 points
14:50The challenger needs 12.5 points
14:52To win a second out of 24 matches
14:55A draw is worth half a point, and a win is worth one point.
14:57Want to win the world championship at 12:30?
14:58In a venue with important guests and an audience from all over the world
15:01Everyone is quiet to let the man who arrived 6 minutes late see the light.
15:05The match begins
15:05Femika, the country that wasn't interested in chess
15:07Her audience was watching the matches
15:09It's not like it's the Super Bowl
15:11Why doesn't Fischer appear in the first match?
15:13Change after 6 minutes
15:14Some people speculated about how he would wage a tactical and psychological war against Spassky.
15:18He's playing with his brain like a toxic boyfriend.
15:21But the truth is, Fisher was coming 6 minutes late.
15:23Because there's a third fight.
15:24A fight with his inner demons
15:26After the first step, which embarrasses Bobby Fischer, Saya gets up and relaxes.
15:29He objects to the placement of the cameras.
15:30Oh sir! I don't know that I'm being gentle, sir!
15:32After 28 moves, the match is close to a tie.
15:35But Fisher makes a mistake
15:36Only a beginner would do that
15:37A soldier eats, and his elephant creates... what's happening?
15:40They are watching the match, and among them are those who are following the game.
15:42I can't believe Fisher would admit to a mistake like this.
15:44Fisher must have planned and studied this move for years.
15:47To defeat that Soviet guy without taking a beating
15:50But in reality, with all due respect to the specialists
15:53The game was wrong
15:54Of course, when he lost, it was a shock to the entire world.
15:56For them, Fischer was a site of fission.
15:58Svaski wins the first match
16:00Fisher-Beeb threatened to withdraw if the cameras weren't removed.
16:03Honestly, I won't be able to concentrate because of her movements.
16:06This isn't Abu Hamad's job, Captain Mat, you'll crack it open
16:07I'll pay a 2000 pound fine and withdraw with my dignity intact.
16:09But of course, my dear, we're in a capitalist era.
16:11And there are some things like that.
16:13And advertisers, if there were no cameras, they wouldn't be able to...
16:16Of course, they rejected this statement because, quite simply
16:18What the game gained was based on showcasing and recording matches.
16:21In the second match, Fisher wasn't 6 minutes late.
16:23Fisher isn't even showing up for the match.
16:25They consider it closed
16:26Therefore, Fischer loses his second match.
16:28The score is now 2-0 in favor of Spassky.
16:30In the third match, Fisher even had an important condition for coming
16:32This match is being played in a small, enclosed hall.
16:35There are no dowries or cameras involved.
16:37Of course, the tournament organizers insisted on refusing
16:39And it was possible, keep in mind, that Spassky himself would refuse.
16:41It was announced at that time that he was the winner, and no one could blame him.
16:44Although Soviet officials requested that Spassky refuse
16:46However, Spassky agreed to play
16:48He said, "I'll play it, I mean, I'll play it."
16:50Even if you separate me
16:51Indeed, the match was filmed in a closed hall with only one television camera.
16:55Fabi Fisher preceded it with an opening match he had never played before.
16:59The opening of Benoni is a Hebrew word meaning "my."
17:03The first person to hit it was a man named Arne Ryan Ginnehm in 1825
17:07He was able to learn the moves of this game after suffering from a block, that's why it has a Soro in it.
17:11He used to say that it was a refuge for him from his sadness
17:13The opening, my dear, is not just a fierce opening.
17:15But Kaban and playing risk
17:17A battle with no draw; there's no winning or losing.
17:19First that
17:19If what's really happening between Fischer and Spassky is a fight
17:22This opening is a death blow
17:24Because of the maneuver, Fischer could win the match.
17:26The result will turn from two to one
17:28After five matches, Fischer manages to tie with Spassky
17:31Two and a half, catch two and a half
17:33Spassky, after that, my dear, is doing a Tiki Tiki light show.
17:36It is known to us as Darabweedh
17:37And the governor is a sip
17:38Spaski complained that there were things wrong with the chairs or the lighting.
17:42With traces on it
17:43And the Americans may have affected his mind with radiation.
17:45Because of the pressure the match was putting on
17:47After all, the Americans wanted to poison him.
17:49And it doesn't differ much from Fisher's own ideas.
17:51The Russians have already checked the chairs, lighting, and everything else.
17:54Do you know what, my dear?
17:55What's up, Abu Hamil?
17:56These two girls are dead
17:57In the hour, my dear, we arrive at the Empress of the Century.
17:59This is the match where you study the history of chess the most
18:01He resembles many of the great players in the symphony
18:04Because of its great beauty and magnificence
18:06The topic was surprising even to Spassky himself.
18:08Fisher is used to moving the soldier in front of the king when he plays Labyrinth.
18:11But he moves the soldier in front of the minister
18:14Or what is known as the English opening
18:16This completely derails all of Spassky's preparations.
18:19It's good that the gameplay wasn't the usual Fisher gameplay.
18:22Which is characterized by high pressure and strain
18:24No, it's like he's taken the Salance match and is playing with ease and slowness.
18:27Spassky was deprived of movement
18:28He pressed it to push each piece back
18:31And through it, he cannot attack your piece and render it completely incapacitated.
18:35This match, my dear, is considered one of the most beautiful chess matches.
18:39Your music combines beauty and precision
18:41To such an extent, my dear, that Spassky himself
18:43He is a border guard from the Soviet Union.
18:45Fisher stood up and clapped because of his fascination with these orbits.
18:48In a game-like manner, he reveals the secrets of a falsifier.
18:51It reveals a beautiful side to Spassky: he is a true athlete.
18:54It's as if, at that moment, all the pressure I put into the game is lifted from it.
18:59Strip everything of its surrounding circumstances and return it to the simple game between two people who love it and are skilled at it.
19:06My dear, the result is 11.5 and the votes are 8.5
19:10All Fischer needs is half a point, meaning a draw.
19:13But he settles the matter and wins match number 21.
19:16He is crowned world champion
19:19Tell me, my dear, that the show is over and therefore the episode is over, but I'm not finished yet.
19:23Bobby Fischer is receiving a hero's welcome in America
19:27The reclusive, introverted man, fixated on one idea: the chessboard.
19:32He doesn't know what to do outside of it.
19:34He became the most famous person in America
19:36He is stubbornly clinging to huge deals and publicity
19:38Lots of money for appearing in competitions
19:40Someone else would have become a millionaire king from the game
19:42But he surprises the whole world with an unexpected move
19:45Just like that, in chess, he disappears and rejects all offers, he doesn't want anything.
19:48And the 30-year period appears very rarely in the world.
19:51And in the second tournament, a brilliant Russian champion named Karpov appears.
19:55He's 20 years old and he's challenging Fisher to a bite.
19:58Let me tell you, my dear, that Fischer submitted 179 applications to the Chess Federation.
20:04Why? So he can play
20:05My requests in life don't amount to 179
20:07It could be 177, but never 179.
20:10Let me tell you, my dear friend, that the union, after pulling its hair out, approves 177 out of 179 student requests.
20:19He made two requests and said, "So you've gone too far."
20:21Fisher wanted to eliminate all points gained through draws.
20:24And if the player who holds the ball is satisfied, it's enough for him to play in 8 matches only.
20:27Because the one who stays with his brother
20:28And the competitor is the one who is trying to break the system.
20:30What does it mean to change the entire tournament system?
20:33Of course, it wouldn't have been politically acceptable to the Soviet Union.
20:35Requests are met with rejection.
20:37And the problem, my dear, is that Fisher wasn't in it.
20:39He wasn't worth it from him in order to take something
20:40He actually refuses to enter the tournament
20:42Karpov is declared world champion
20:44And while there is a state of extreme pride
20:46The atmosphere of the Soviet Union's corridors
20:48Of course, I regained the title
20:49To the point that Brezhnev himself accepted the game and said to him
20:52Laqat won the title
20:53Hold on to it and don't give it to anyone.
20:55I'm telling you
20:56Anyone who calls you "Ya Muntalif Baba"
20:58Give me that title, my love, don't go with him.
21:00Of course, my dear, in which country?
21:01Any president who says the game is like this
21:03This means that he is encouraging him.
21:05He excites him
21:06He tells him
21:07Keep your title, champion!
21:08Yes, and your dream has traveled
21:09You are in the tree, Bisperto
21:11But for the two sides, there was Soviet arrogance.
21:12These are instructions
21:13Keep this title, don't give it to anyone.
21:15Even if I play better, it's not an invitation.
21:17Happiness is a part of my blood
21:18Of course, my dear, America feels very disappointed.
21:20The Americans felt that Fisher had let them down.
21:22The man who rejected all the tempting offers
21:24To return to the world of chess
21:25And the chess game apologizes completely.
21:27And he disappears from sight
21:28And he lives this whole time depressed
21:30And he was glaring with conspiracy theories.
21:31For example, it was reported that the KGB
21:33He's being expelled and trying to kill him with radioactivity.
21:35They're trying to mess with his brain.
21:36By telephone
21:37Fisher was in a war that never ended
21:39But the problem is that the desired war
21:41It happened between him and himself
21:42Certainly, with time
21:42His hatred for America became adorned
21:44Especially when she wants to feel
21:45She exploited his genius
21:47For political purposes
21:48In order to achieve a media and political victory
21:50About the Soviet Union
21:51And to cover up America's defeat
21:53The one who was in the war of Fitna
21:54The pressures that were placed on his shoulder
21:56On his winning journey
21:57World length
21:57And that he's not just going to represent himself or his family
21:59He's going to pack up the Soviet Union
22:01This is a dialogue
22:02And perhaps that was the reason that made her refuse to defend the title
22:04He withdraws from the only thing he knows about the world
22:07Too much pressure made me collapse
22:09And he can't control her because of his psychological state.
22:10What did my dear think of?
22:11You give the game everything in your life
22:14And suddenly he discovered that you were being exploited to play this game
22:16So your relationship with this game is over.
22:18What's the problem? That all your relationships in life revolve around this game.
22:22My dear, the idea is that you cut off the only thing you have any connection to.
22:26Immersing oneself in a particular game while isolating oneself from social life
22:29It can cause serious psychological problems
22:31In the first game of chess, each player has 20 moves they can make.
22:35This means that after the first movement
22:36You have a quarter to a hundred moves you can make.
22:38This number doubles with every step
22:40It could reach ten, with 45 rows in front of it.
22:43That, my dear, is greater than the number of atoms in the solar system.
22:46Playing here allows him to anticipate his opponent's next move.
22:48Amid endless possibilities
22:50It's possible that the matter will end with him seeing the world itself as a chessboard.
22:53Especially if he had an imbalance from the beginning.
22:55He messed with the game like Paul Fisher
22:57In 1990, after he disappeared from public view
23:01Bob Fisher receives a message from someone named Zeta
23:04Zita is a 19-year-old chess player.
23:07The message asks him to return to the game.
23:09And she describes him as the Mozart of chess
23:11Bobby Fisher, who lived his entire life without a single romantic relationship.
23:14It responds to the message and not only that, it gets involved in the game.
23:17A Yugoslavian billionaire also appears.
23:19He offers Bobby Fischer the chance to play his old rival.
23:21Petsky after twenty years of being a month old
23:23In exchange for a prize worth five million dollars
23:26Fisher, my dear, agrees
23:27Because everyone is shaken by the news of Fisher's return
23:29The problem, my dear, is that the match was in Yugoslavia.
23:31At the heart of the civil war
23:33And Fischer's participation meant breaking the spell that America had set on Yugoslavia.
23:37The US government sent him a warning
23:38Hey Fisher, don't play games
23:40Or will your fate be prison?
23:41You are a symbol of America
23:42At one of the conferences, Fisher held this message and spat on it.
23:45In a clear challenge to the United States of America
23:48And the tournament in which Afshar wins again is played against Sklaski
23:51After a friendship developed between them over the years
23:53Despite all the animosity created by the media on both sides
23:56Mohammed is a brother who takes five million dollars, one of those dollars.
23:58What money is he going to divide among us?
24:00The man bought it, but he didn't earn anything.
24:02According to what Gary Kasfarov said when he was commentating on this match
24:04He says that this match missed out on a lot of development in the field of chess.
24:08It's like watching a mall fight between two old men.
24:10They're returning to the ring for the last time.
24:12America is dear, of course, after what he did.
24:14She considers him a criminal and has charged him with offenses punishable by law.
24:16It can lead to up to ten years in prison and a pardon
24:18About the millions he earned for the United States of America
24:20America's first love
24:22He becomes the accused and demands justice.
24:24Of course, Fadl is a fugitive, sitting in Yugoslavia.
24:26And then he went to Hungary, all this time while he was unable to return to America.
24:28He was in Hungary in 1996
24:30His mother died after he had begun to get close to her.
24:33And he is forgiven two years later, my dear.
24:35His older sister, Shawn, dies
24:36The person closest to him was the one who brought him his first chessboard.
24:39So that Fisher would lose any family support
24:41A homeless person without family or country is preferable.
24:43The situation between Fischer and America continues like this.
24:45Until 2001, when the bruises occurred
24:4611. Stennba calls Bobby Fisher on the radio.
24:49Filipina and he finds joy
24:51He says that what happened in America is true.
24:53As a result of America's colonial policies
24:54Because, of course, the American public who don't hear this will be upset.
24:57More and more and more, and it goes beyond that more and more
24:58He disappears for a while, then news of him spreads.
25:00He was arrested in Japan
25:02Because he didn't have a passport, the US government revoked his passport.
25:04From last year, as punishment for the attack
25:07She and her policies are the only ones, my dear.
25:08Iceland, a small country, thought
25:10The one who found the Dindus Basque in it
25:12She made a bold move challenging Japan
25:14and the United States
25:15Fisher was offered Icelandic citizenship
25:17This is because the Icelandic people are of Manisi descent.
25:19Fisher's attendance at the World Championships
25:21And how his presence put the city of Vikia Vik on the map
25:24They considered it part of his history
25:25He is being received in Iceland for the second time.
25:28Decades after winning the world championship
25:30They gave him a hero's welcome.
25:31But he wasn't the same person.
25:33He was old and broken
25:34Ghost of the hero he was
25:35At a press conference
25:36Understand the George Bush administration
25:37Bahil is responsible for his imprisonment.
25:38He lived there in seclusion and tranquility until the end of his life
25:40Fodel speaks forcefully about the evil nature of his country.
25:43Obsession equals obsession with chess
25:45This one too, my dear, attacked the chessboard
25:47He described it as a silly game
25:48It's all about memorization, not creativity.
25:50Give it up, my dear
25:50When you live your whole life devoted to only one thing
25:54Just one thing for your whole life
25:55Then you discover at the end of your life
25:57If you waste your time on nonsense
25:58In your opinion, of course
25:59Something painful
26:00Losing a game by stopping is a failure in chess, as some players describe it.
26:03You imagine Picasso died five years later, but only because of his affairs.
26:06And the rest of the painting that we know today
26:07It didn't appear in the light
26:08Every match was a failure at the stadium
26:10In this game, it was a real loss.
26:11A loss for chess itself
26:12His match against Espaceci in 1972
26:14Chess has become a popular game in America and throughout the world.
26:18According to United Nations statistics
26:20Today there are approximately 600 million chess games played worldwide.
26:23It could be considered the most popular board game.
26:26And Bobby Fisher's book, which is called
26:28Bobby Fisher's Teach 's Chase was a huge success
26:30It remains one of the best-selling chess books in the world to this day.
26:33In 2008, Bobby Fischer died in seclusion and peace in Iceland.
26:36His last words on his deathbed
26:38Nothing heals like a human touch.
26:40We're trying to get you to think, dear, about who is saying this.
26:41This is Fisher, who lived her whole life in a state of isolation.
26:44The one who is separated from his mother is 16 years old.
26:46Because it was preventing him from playing chess
26:47Fashir had literally his whole life
26:49He was black and white, he knew no other but him.
26:52Fashir is a prisoner of a scandalous tale, unlike others.
26:54And its only hero is a creative storyteller.
27:03An episode about chess, God willing, in the next episode.
27:05We'll do it with playing cards and then with a belt
27:08And we'll start a coffee shop project.
27:09That's it, and we'll get money and stuff.
27:11I'm planning for the seeds now and looking forward to leisure time.
27:13Regarding the pensions of working women, how are you?
27:15No, if you have a lot, there's still more to come.
27:17Bank of Luck and Table
27:19Snakes and Ladders has games
27:21A lot